2017 Worldcon Room Booking
Sep. 2nd, 2016 03:37 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The initial hotel announcement from Worldcon 75 in Helsinki went out yesterday, and as is usual with such things, has triggered Outrage and Horror, particularly from people who are unaware that most European cities do not build convention centers with mega hotels with thousands of rooms adjacent to them. We're facing next year roughly the same thing as we had at the Worldcons in London and Glasgow (and other European sites before that): a bunch of hotels, spread out all over the place, and some or even most of them requiring a ride on transit. One good thing about Helsinki is that apparently Worldcon members will get transit passes; however, the details of where you get them and for how long they are good haven't come out yet. For instance, we don't seem to know whether you'll have to pay a transit fare to go to a place where you collect the credentials that include the transit pass, or whether it's good for any of the "shoulder" days before and after the convention. I assume that these details will be forthcoming.
Most galling to most people is that all of the rooms in the only hotel that's connected to the convention center have been held back by the convention for people with access/disability issues. The Holiday Inn at the conference center is apparently not that large. Even this far out, and even for someone like me with a Spire membership in their program (that's the highest level there is), can get no rooms there during the core of the convention. (I looked outside of the hotel block; no room at the Inn.)
Another complaint is that the rooms are more expensive than what was originally promised. Well, yes; as the committee have said, these are only the initial rooms for which they have blocks reserved. They're negotiating for more. And don't make the mistake of assuming that the hotels listed there are the only hotels in all of Helsinki; far from it. For example, I'm seeing availability at the Holiday Inn City Center (adjacent to the main train station) as low as €116/night (includes tax, but not breakfast; some discounted rates are advance purchase/non-refundable). That puts you two stops (about 5 minutes on the train) from the Convention Center with very frequent train service (Sometimes the headways appears to be less than what I've had to endure for an elevator at some conventions.) It's not ideal (and I certainly hope that the convention arranges for a check room so people can store stuff they'd normally haul back to their hotel rooms on site), but it's not the apocalypse that some people seem to be making it out to be.
Me? I've booked the run-of-con at the Holiday Inn City Center (at a somewhat higher and refundable rate that includes breakfast) and will move to something better if possible.
Cheryl Morgan has written today about her previous site visit to Helsinki, which I hope some of you will find helpful. Just don't expect things to be like a standard American Big City.
Most galling to most people is that all of the rooms in the only hotel that's connected to the convention center have been held back by the convention for people with access/disability issues. The Holiday Inn at the conference center is apparently not that large. Even this far out, and even for someone like me with a Spire membership in their program (that's the highest level there is), can get no rooms there during the core of the convention. (I looked outside of the hotel block; no room at the Inn.)
Another complaint is that the rooms are more expensive than what was originally promised. Well, yes; as the committee have said, these are only the initial rooms for which they have blocks reserved. They're negotiating for more. And don't make the mistake of assuming that the hotels listed there are the only hotels in all of Helsinki; far from it. For example, I'm seeing availability at the Holiday Inn City Center (adjacent to the main train station) as low as €116/night (includes tax, but not breakfast; some discounted rates are advance purchase/non-refundable). That puts you two stops (about 5 minutes on the train) from the Convention Center with very frequent train service (Sometimes the headways appears to be less than what I've had to endure for an elevator at some conventions.) It's not ideal (and I certainly hope that the convention arranges for a check room so people can store stuff they'd normally haul back to their hotel rooms on site), but it's not the apocalypse that some people seem to be making it out to be.
Me? I've booked the run-of-con at the Holiday Inn City Center (at a somewhat higher and refundable rate that includes breakfast) and will move to something better if possible.
Cheryl Morgan has written today about her previous site visit to Helsinki, which I hope some of you will find helpful. Just don't expect things to be like a standard American Big City.
no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 04:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 04:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 07:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 08:15 pm (UTC)For information, here's what you can expect of any Worldcon not held in a major American city: Lots of smaller hotels, spread out over a larger area than you would expect. This doesn't change. There are only a handful of cities in the USA that have mega hotels either with or immediately adjacent to convention space large enough to hold a Worldcon. Unless we limit ourselves to perhaps as many as ten US cities for Worldcon (if that), this is going to happen every single year.
See also last year's Worldcon in Spokane, which is one of the smallest cities that has ever held a Worldcon, and Reno in 2011, which is in a dead heat with Spokane for that title. Both of them were bitterly criticized for the vast distances between the convention center and their hotels, and neither of which had "one big hotel with enough rooms to house most or all of the members" adjacent to it. Even the Chicago Hyatt, which is the closest to a "one roof Worldcon" we've had all of the years I've been attending (back to 1984) isn't enough.
Of course, we could consider limiting Worldcon to only about 2000 attendees or so, which would not only significantly reduce the cost but also make it much easier to fit into smaller, more compact facilities. But personally I don't think that's a good idea.
no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 08:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 09:38 pm (UTC)I'm sorry that you (singular, personally), are offended. I also have lost a lot of patience with people, (not necessarily including you (singular, personally)), who are convinced that all places in the world are just like Big American Cities, and that it is the responsibility of those places to be just like Big American Cities.
And I am reminded of a certain participant in this discussion (not you (singular, personally)) who notoriously called Australia a "small country" on the record.
no subject
Date: 2016-09-03 11:14 pm (UTC)And, of course, your kindly after-the-explosion explanation of how these things work, buried in a 2016 LJ comment, excellent as it is, will serve as a universally available resource that no American fan planning to attend some future European Worldcon will have any excuse not to have read.